H2 formation and excitation in the Stephan's Quintet galaxy-wide collision
P. Guillard, F. Boulanger, G. Pineau des Forets, P.N. Appleton

TL;DR
This paper investigates the presence, excitation, and cooling role of molecular hydrogen in the galaxy-wide collision of Stephan's Quintet, proposing a model of shock interactions in multiphase gas to explain observations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model of shock interactions in multiphase dusty gas to explain H2 formation, excitation, and its role as a dominant coolant in galaxy collisions.
Findings
H2 forms in postshock gas within 5 million years.
H2 emission is powered by dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy.
H2 cooling dominates over X-ray emission in the postshock medium.
Abstract
Context. The Spitzer Space Telescope has detected a powerful (L(H2)~10^41 erg s-1) mid-infrared H2 emission towards the galaxy-wide collision in the Stephan's Quintet (SQ) galaxy group. This discovery was followed by the detection of more distant H2-luminous extragalactic sources, with almost no spectroscopic signatures of star formation. These observations set molecular gas in a new context where one has to describe its role as a cooling agent of energetic phases of galaxy evolution. Aims. The SQ postshock medium is observed to be multiphase, with H2 gas coexisting with a hot (~ 5 10^6 K), X-ray emitting plasma. The surface brightness of H2 lines exceeds that of the X-rays and the 0-0 S(1) H2 linewidth is ~ 900 km s-1, of the same order of the collision velocity. These observations raise three questions we propose to answer: (i) Why H2 is present in the postshock gas ? (ii) How can we…
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